Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Watch: Clint Bowyer and Ryan Newman exchange punches after NASCAR All-Star race

Watch: Clint Bowyer and Ryan Newman exchange punches after NASCAR All-Star race

Following the incident, both Newman and Bowyer had conflicting reports of what caused the brawl.

Click here to read the full article

Do you want to bet on sports AND play your favorite casino games? Be sure to visit this list with the best online casinos that offer sports betting!

KLM Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Connor Syme-145
Joakim Lagergren+300
Francesco Laporta+1800
Ricardo Gouveia+2800
Richie Ramsay+2800
Fabrizio Zanotti+5000
Jayden Schaper+7000
Rafael Cabrera Bello+7000
David Ravetto+12500
Andy Sullivan+17500
Click here for more...
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
Click here for more...
US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Rory McIlroy+1000
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
Click here for more...
The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

Related Post

Jordan Spieth says he won’t try to force a victory at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-AmJordan Spieth says he won’t try to force a victory at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Since finishing T-9 in his Open Championship title defense last July in Carnoustie, Jordan Spieth has played in nine PGA TOUR events. He’s failed to crack the top 10 in any of those starts. It’s the longest non-top-10 stretch of his stellar TOUR career. Of course, Spieth isn’t about top-10 finishes. He’s interested only in winning. From that standpoint, he’s made 34 worldwide starts without a win since his breathtaking Open victory at Royal Birkdale in 2017. But as he prepares for this week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, site of one of his 11 career TOUR victories, Spieth is encouraged by the state of his game. The top-10s may be elusive, but the confidence is not. “I’m in a good place right now,� said Spieth, who once again will partner with country musician Jake Owen in the pro-am portion of the event. That twosome will play with Dustin Johnson/Wayne Gretzky for the first three rounds this week, starting at Monterey Peninsula on Thursday. “I feel like my game’s trending the right direction,� Spieth added. “Sometimes that means results are coming soon. Sometimes it means they’re coming later. But they’re coming.� And Spieth is willing to remain patient – something he didn’t always do last season as he desperately tried to avoid his first winless year as a pro. “I’m not going to chase them as hard as I tried to, maybe force or chase them last year because you can get hurt doing that,� Spieth said. “You can get into some bad patterns.� Asked if he’s hearing a lot of negative static based off of last season’s results, Spieth said no. He does, however, hear people talking about comparisons to other years – especially the 2014-15 season when he won five times, including his first two majors, and took home the FedExCup. “I’m used to that now four or five years in,� Spieth said. “But at the same time, at this point it’s how do I improve to get myself into contention this week, and then what do I do next week, and just staying very present and recognizing the longevity of a career and that your career’s not defined by a couple bad years. “I could have really poor years the rest of my career and still have a pretty fantastic career. So if I just think about it that way, it kind of certainly makes me a little happier, frees me up a bit.�

Click here to read the full article

Tiger Woods’ dominance at Torrey Pines started at 1991 Junior WorldTiger Woods’ dominance at Torrey Pines started at 1991 Junior World

Before Tiger Woods won seven times in 16 starts at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines, before he won eight times in 17 starts as a professional (2008 U.S. Open), there was the 1991 Junior World. The establishing scene for the drama to come, the tournament would establish certain themes that would come up again and again at Torrey, first among them Woods’ jaw-dropping mastery but also the unforced errors by those in his midst.     “He was just a scrawny kid,� said Kevin Riley, older brother to ’91 Junior World runner-up Chris. “We all knew who Tiger Woods was because he won all the Junior Worlds, but that had been on the shorter courses, and he didn’t get to show off his length.� Not so for his first Junior World at Torrey. Kevin, who dabbled on the Web.com Tour and is now a caddie at Shadow Creek in Las Vegas, walked all 18 holes as the 6-foot, 137-pound Woods overtook the older Chris Riley, 17, on the back nine. Woods carded a final-round 69 to become the first 15-year-old to win the 15-17 age division, picking up his sixth Junior World title overall. No one was surprised, least of all Woods. “I have no idea,� he told the Los Angeles Times when asked how many tournaments he had won. “I quit counting after 11-and-under. I had 110 trophies. I threw them all into the garage.� It was July 19, 1991. Steffi Graf and Michael Stich had just won Wimbledon, Ian Baker-Finch was two days away from winning his first and only major title at The Open Championship, and Tiger was still Eldrick, his otherworldly talent still not yet a matter of public record. “I remember Kevin’s first comment when he came home,� says Mike Riley, Chris and Kevin’s father, who was working and did not attend the final round of the ’91 Junior World. “It stuck with me forever. He said, ‘Dad, that guy is really long.’� Chris Riley birdied the 11th hole at Torrey, which gave him a one-shot lead, but as is so often the case with Woods, one shot changed everything. It happened at the long, par-4 12th hole, and Woods’ thunderous drive left him only a 7-iron into the green. Riley, standing in the fairway with a wood in his hands, had an unpleasant epiphany. Woods was so much longer than Riley, and longer than 16-year-old Mark Worthington, the third member of their group, that this was not a David-versus-Goliath story. It was a mismatch. “He hit it over 300 and was like 50 yards ahead of us,� says Riley, who won once on TOUR, played in the 2004 Ryder Cup, and last year became the men’s golf coach at the University of San Diego. “He just blew us away from there. Even at 15 he was a man amongst boys.� For Worthington, now a realtor in the Seattle area, that fact came to light at Torrey South’s par-5 sixth hole, a sweeping dogleg right where Woods took an aggressive line off the tee. “He hit it farther right than I thought would be any good,� Worthington says. “I was thinking he would be in the rough, which was pretty severe, but he had a mid-iron into the green. “I remember he hit it really, really long,� Worthington adds. “I was longer than most, but he had a different ball flight. His ball went way, way higher than anybody had ever seen.� Worthington, the third-round leader, shot a final-round 78, but he would remember his first big national tournament, and flying from Seattle to San Diego with him mom, Ruth. He met Glen Albaugh, who would become his coach at the University of the Pacific, and he met Woods, whom he had previously seen only in Sports Illustrated. They would clash again. Worthington still talks about the Pacific Northwest Men’s Amateur at Royal Oaks in Oregon, where Woods hit a 4-iron straight up into the air and over a bank of trees on a par-5. The ball’s meteoric rise and towering trajectory seemed to defy physics. “He hit this thing like 7 feet from the hole,� says Worthington, who would lose their match and play in a handful of Web.com Tour events in his pro career. He chuckles at the memory. Riley laughs, too, when he talks about Woods, who would become a teammate not just in the Canon Cup and Walker Cup but also the Ryder Cup. (They would team up to beat Darren Clarke and Ian Poulter at Oakland Hills in 2004, one of the few U.S. highlights that week.) The first time they met, Riley was 10, Woods was 8, and with Coke-bottle glasses. It was the Junior World, again, this time at Presidio Hills, and, well, Woods won that one, too. “Chris had a one-stroke lead going into the last hole but snap-hooked it into the parking lot,� Kevin Riley says. He cracks up laughing. “That was the first time we heard of Tiger Woods!� It would be the first of several slipups by those endeavoring to beat Woods in San Diego. Tom Lehman bogeyed the last two holes and lost to him in 2005, Woods’ third win at Torrey and 41st on TOUR. Jose Maria Olazabal missed a short putt in ’06, Woods’ 47th TOUR win. Like Riley and Worthington, they can smile if not laugh now. There’s no shame in falling to arguably the greatest player of all time, and life goes on. Boys become dads, the sting of losing subsides, and the Woods highlight reel is all anyone really remembers, anyway. “He always beat me,� Chris Riley says. “He was the standard. I never quite got to that level.� He pauses. “I never could figure out how he stayed on 18 at Torrey every time,� he adds. “I’d ask him about it and he’d say, ‘Yeah, we’re splurging.’ That was before the Lodge, so it was kind of an older hotel, but back in ’91 that was high dollar. Every year, right on 18 on the South Course.� It was probably just a matter of convenience, but maybe someone had a premonition that this prime piece of California real estate would become Tiger Woods’ home away from home.

Click here to read the full article